Relationship Language Book

Have you ever been attempting to communicate something to someone, felt completely misunderstood and wondered why? Have you ever witnessed a conversation between two people and wondered why one of the people in the conversation was being misunderstood by the other when it seemed completely clear to you? Do you have that one person in your life that you can always turn to because they just seem to get “it”? They seem to completely understand where you’re coming from and there are rarely misunderstandings and bickering? Ever stop to think why you communicate so easily with that person?

Each relationship has its own language. And just like with any language, all people in the conversation must be able to understand one another for communication to be effective. The people you click most easily with? Those are the ones that you have subconsciously created a naturally flowing relationship language with.

Relationship Language is – Speaking It, Hearing It, Understanding It, and Being Understood. When all of this falls into place, you will feel fabulous in your relationship! So…Let’s work on consciously creating your NEW Relationship Language – one that will allow you to build close, deeply loving, fulfilling relationships without compromising who you are.

Being aware of yourself is key to being able to communicate what’s important to you in a relationship. For a relationship to thrive, you want to fully be able to interpret what the other person is communicating to you and vice versa. If you haven’t stopped to understand what makes up the language for that relationship, there will be misunderstandings, mis-communication, and frustration. We all have enough on our plates these days…so being able to hone your Relationship Language skills will be another step in creating an overall life of balance and fulfillment. Not to mention a relationship that allows you to feel completely heard, understood, and cherished.

In this book you will learn more about:

Why you have settled for “kinda feeling loved” in the past rather than attracting “knock your socks of love”